Age of Ruin
Age of Ruin is an American metalcore band from Fairfax, Virginia, United States.[1] The group formed in 1998 and released a demo album the following year. The band's first album was self-released in 2000.
History
Formed in 1998, the group released a demo in 1999 titled The Opium Dead and their first album, Black Sands Of The Hourglass was self-released in 2000 and re-released in 2004 with two bonus tracks on Tribunal Records.[2] In 2002 the group released an EP entitled Autumn Lanterns for Tribunal Records.[3] After LP and EP releases on Tribunal Records and a number of substantial lineup changes, Age of Ruin released The Tides of Tragedy via Eulogy Records (Alveran Records in Europe) in the spring of 2004. The band drew large crowds across the United States on the Van's Warped Tour 2004,[4] and the hype continued to build. Subsequent tours with bands such as Shadows Fall, Darkest Hour, The Bled, Sworn Enemy, Good Clean Fun and Anterrabae continued to cause an already strong following to grow. In Winter 2006, Age of Ruin kicked off the year with their first European tour, a 25-day tour crossing 12 countries. Sharing the stage with other mainstream acts such as The Black Dahlia Murder, Bleeding Through, and Most Precious Blood.[5]
In 2008, the original lineup of Age of Ruin minus Patrick Owens (who was replaced by Aaron Sirott on drums) got back together and recorded and released "One Thousand Needles" on Eulogy Records.
After a two years hiatus, "The Ruin" released a new song called "Cancerous" at the end of 2010.
Lineup
- Christopher Fleming - bass guitar (1998-2003, 2008-current)
- Daniel Fleming - guitar (1998-2004, 2008-current)
- Derrick Kozerka - vocals (1998-2004, 2008-current)
Former members
- Aaron Sirott - drums (2007-2008)
- Benjamin "The Beard" Swan - vocals (2004-)
- Brian Kerley - guitars (2002-)
- Colin Kercz - drums (2003-2004)
- David Haik - drums (2004-)
- Joseph S. - bass (2003-)
- Joel Hansen - guitar (2007-2008)
- Patrick Owens - drums (1998-2003)
- Ryan Haik - guitars (August 3, 2004- October 7, 2008)
Discography
Albums and EPs
The Opium Dead (EP) (Darkmoonempire Records, 1999)
- 1. Terror
- 2. Blacksunrise
- 3. Scattered Ashes
- 4. Torn Out Wings
Black Sands Of The Hourglass (LP) (Tribunal Records, 2000)
- 1. Footsteps In The Catacombs Of Yesterday
- 2. The Crimson Fails Forever
- 3. Shadows Cast In Candlelight
- 4. Terror
- 5. Cracks In The Mirror
- 6. Blacksunrise
- 7. Angel Dusted Dreamlock
- 8. Withered Rose
- 9. Echos In Stained Glass
Autumn Lanterns (EP) (Tribunal Records, 2002)
- 1. Tainted Ghost Catharsis
- 2. No Kiss Cuts as Deep
- 3. Hung Upon the Weakest Branch
- 4. Glowing Embers
- 5. Water to Wine, Blood to Ink
Longest Winters Woes (EP) (DFF Records, 2003)
- 1. The Harlequin's Kiss
- 2. The Silver Tongues
- 3. Dimmer
- 4. Passage of the Winter's Woes
- 5. The Crimson Fails Forever
- 6. Bleed For Better Days
Black Sands of the Hourglass (re-release) (LP) (Tribunal Records, 2004)
- 1. Footsteps In the Catacombs of Yesterday
- 2. The Crimson Fails Forever
- 3. Shadows Cast In Candlelight
- 4. Terror
- 5. Cracks In the Mirror
- 6. Blacksunrise
- 7. Angel Dusted Dreamlock
- 8. Withered Rose
- 9. Echoes In Stained Glass
- 10. The Icarus Syndrome
- 11. You Give Love a Bad Name (Bon Jovi cover)
The Tides Of Tragedy (LP) (Eulogy Records, 2004)
- 1. Dawn
- 2. Yesterday's Ghost
- 3. Truest Flame
- 4. Elapse
- 5. No Kiss Cuts As Deep
- 6. Diaries Of The Dead
- 7. Serengeti
- 8. Bluest Eyes In Blackest Hearts
- 9. Sirens Passage
- 10. Glowing Embers
- 11. Yours To Bury
- 12. A Portrait Of Solemn Seas ("A Portrait Of Solemn Seas" contains a hidden bonus track, which is a fake live performance of "The Legend of Zelda Theme Song". It begins at the 12 minute and 45 second mark which is at the end of approximately 7 minutes and 7 seconds of silence.)
Live Music Series: Beyond Warped (EP) (Aloha Records, 2007)
- 1. Bluest Eyes in Blackest Hearts
- 2. Yesterday's Ghost
- 3. No Kiss Cuts As Deep
- 4. Bleed For Better Days
- 5. Truest Flame
References
- Sharpe-Young, Garry (2005). New Wave of American Heavy Metal. Zonda Books Limited. p. 19. ISBN 0958268401.
- Age of Ruin at AllMusic
- Review of Autumn Lanterns. Exclaim!, August 2002.
- "Age Of Ruin tour schedule (Europe)". Lambgoat.com. Retrieved 19 November 2020.